Sunday, October 3, 2010

Yoo & Delahunty to face the University of St. Thomas community


Journal of Law and Public Policy Forum on presidential powers to take place at University of St. Thomas Law, October 7 2010.
John Yoo, and Prof. Robert Delahunty, former lawyers for the Bush administration's Office of Legal Counsel, will be there as advocates for strong presidential powers. Heidi Kittrosser from the University of Minnesota and Akhil Amar of Yale University – one of this country’s leading law professors -- will support the position for limiting presidential powers. It should be a robust debate.


Anti-torture advocates like Tackling Torture at the Top will be there before the arrival of the registrants to the symposium with orange ribbons, flyers, and banners. People will boycott, people will attend, people will demonstrate outside & raise awareness, others will listen to the speakers and hopefully submit questions. There are speakers that do not support Yoo/Delahunty and there are other speakers that need to answer some pertinent questions.

At the lunch hour, 11:30 -12:30, and at 4:00, there will be demonstrations on the sidewalk outside the building. Everyone could wear an orange ribbon for torture awareness.

John Yoo speaks at 2:15 for 45 minutes. Some people may shun him by leaving the room, or standing
with their backs to him, or may choose to confront him with questions, or a sign. It is not choreographed.
Robert Delahunty is on the panel but not given a time to present an argument.

We need everyone, every body, every mind, to protest the presence of John Yoo and Robert Delahunty. Everyone is welcome to participate in demonstrating our disgust for Robert Delahunty and John Yoo's misuse of the law giving way to the crime of torture. And we believe that accountability is the only way that we can stop this despicable crime.


The use of enhanced presidential powers in time of war would allow the president to negate the laws and treaties that would protect the prisoners from abuse and torture. This is what happened by the memos written by John Yoo and Robert Delahunty. This goes against our laws and our morals. It would be good for UST to refresh their memory to their mission statement at the Law School:
The University of St. Thomas School of Law, as a Catholic law school, is dedicated to integrating faith and reason in the search for truth through a focus on morality and social justice.

On the same day, a different university in nearby St. Paul is making quite a different point of human rights issues.

My Sister's and Brother's Keeper?

Human Rights in the Era of Globalization

This year's theme of the 2010 Macalester International Roundtable is "My Sister's and Brother's Keeper?: Human Rights in the Era of Globalization."
The Macalester International Roundtable will take place on October 7, 8, & 9, 2010 at Macalester College 1600 Grand Avenue St. Paul, Minnesota
All sessions will be held in the John B. Davis Lecture Hall.

The discussions will revolve around such questions as:
What are the main human rights concerns of the 21st century?
What are the primary forces (and contexts) responsible for these issues, and why?
In what specific ways could human rights be advanced, and by whom?

Free and open to the public.

No comments: